Economy

Gold: The Good, Bad, and Truly Ugly

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by , via Silver Doctors.com

THE GOLD STANDARD:  Although it may be unrealistically optimistic, I believe my paraphrase of a Churchill quote:

“Central Bankers will eventually do the right thing and return to a gold standard after they have exhausted all other alternatives.”

While central bankers are exhausting all other alternatives, I worry about the collateral damage to 90% of the population who are not first in line on the fiat money gravy train that benefits the financial and political elite.

Clearly, central bankers will return to a gold standard only if forced by a financial implosion, economic collapse or equivalent disaster.  Hence, the powers-that-be will do whatever is necessary to conceal the sovereign debt bubble, hide the insolvency of sovereign governments, and extend and pretend regarding the value of bonds, equities, and fiat paper currencies.

THE GOOD:  Gold is and has been real money for 5,000 years.

THE BAD:  Gold prices will benefit from the following items.  (This is a long and incomplete list.)

  • Greek bankruptcy and their inevitable exit from the Euro zone: Such an exit will confirm bad debts, weaken or destroy the banks that made the loans, and damage confidence in fiat currencies, ever-increasing debt, and sovereign debt collateral.
  • Euro, Yen, Dollar collapse: Can a major world currency collapse in value without damaging confidence in all other fiat currencies?  People will have more confidence in gold and will lose confidence in fiat currencies.
  • Baltic Dry Index has hit new all-time lows. Global economic activity is weakening.  Will central banks do nothing as the world economy weakens or will they continue the global QE to infinity to stimulate the global economy?  Of course central banks will print currencies.
  • Price of oil has collapsed. The same arguments apply as with the Baltic Dry Index.
  • Central bank creation of currencies: QE to infinity!  Maybe it will prolong the current system or perhaps a deflationary collapse will occur regardless.  Would you rather own gold, or sovereign bonds backed by insolvent governments that can repay their debts only because central banks create new currency and monetize their debt?
  • Cooked statistics: Who still believes the GDP, unemployment, retail sales or real estate sales numbers in the US?
  • Ukraine conflict: Expect this growing conflict to damage European stability, increase military budgets, and substantially increase debt and financial risk.
  • Syria and the Middle East: Expect more military spending, debt, bond monetization, and currency in circulation.
  • “No boots on the ground,” except in the Middle East, Asia, Africa, Europe, and South America. However, I know of no plan to invade Antarctica.  Swell!  And you can trust that the economies of Europe and the US are humming along nicely, employment is robust, the people are happy, banks are solvent, politicians are truthful, and this is the best of all possible worlds.

THE TRULY UGLY:

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